This eJournal distributes working and
accepted paper abstracts covering various aspects of behavioral and experimental economics.
The objective of this eJournal is to foster insight into the cognitive and affective
(emotional) factors that influence the human judgment and decision making process. The
discipline of behavioral economics focuses on why individuals make decisions which appear
to reflect bounded rationality, quasi rationality, and irrational behavior. This eJournal
disseminates research that integrates the methods used in behavioral decision theory with
the ones long established in traditional economics.

Behavioral economists, socio-economists, institutional economists, evolutionary economists,
and psychologists are encouraged to submit research endeavors that reveal new psychological,
sociological, and institutional applications and developments to economic behavior. The
eJournal will include experimental tests of standard economic theory as well as conceptual
and experimental papers dealing with behavioral decision theories and activities.